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  1. #26
    Newbie Mypenry's Avatar
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  2. #27
    Excitable Boy
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    The most ridiculous thing about the helmet fine is that it's strictly punitive, and has nothing to do with actual safety.

    I got one in Phuket ~1997- I asked the cop what I should do as I didn't have a helmet and had to ride back to my hotel- he said it was no problem as all I had to do was show the ticket if I was pulled over again that day, and I would be let go (which did happen, and I was given a pass).
    There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.
    HST

  3. #28
    Thailand Expat
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    Phuketwan supports the Mothers or Motorcycles action group. (MoM). MoM seeks to improve road safety awareness and education and to increase the number of people who wear helmets on motorcycles.

  4. #29
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    The guy that got knocked off his bike last night outside my place was glad he had a helmet on.
    Still he should learn not to pull straight out in front of speeding taxis. Lucky it wasn't a bus...


    unlike the lad a couple months ago.

  5. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bogon View Post
    When the police start observing the laws of Thailand, then the general public will.
    Until that happens (not in my lifetime or even my sprems) people will carry on regardless.
    What was the last clampdown? Think it was stopping at zebra crossings. Before that it was something just as much ignored.
    Motoring in Thailand "what a joy".
    And they'd have to give the policeman a big raise..

  6. #31
    Thailand Expat
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    Thailand's government seeks to get a head start on improving road safety
    Tuesday 15 May 2012

    Motorbikes are ubiquitous in Thailand, but helmets are not. Activists aim to tackle a problem that claims thousands of lives


    Rush-hour traffic in Bangkok. Thailand has the world's worst record on motorbike accidents, which claim 11,000 lives a year.

    Photograph: Paula Bronstein/Getty Images

    If you're a visitor to Thailand who likes to do as the locals do, you may board one of the motorbikes that whisk the country's inhabitants from one golden beach to the next.But in the process, you may pick up some less desirable local habits, such as ignoring traffic rules, ditching the helmet and having a drink or two before setting off.

    Big mistake. Thailand ranks worst in the world for motorbike and two-wheeler casualties,with more than 11,000 motorbike drivers or passengers dying annually. Official statistics suggest such incidents account for 70% of the country's road fatalities.

    Many die because they don't wear a helmet. According to a Médecins sans Frontières report, unhelmeted riders in Thailand are between two and three times more likely to be killed, and three times likelier to suffer a "disastrous outcome".

    Thailand's government introduced a "year of the helmet" in 2010 and is following up with a 100% helmet use campaign to highlight the danger of riding unprotected. Both schemes are part of an ambitious "master plan on road safety" aimed at hitting the UN target – set by the organisation's decade of action for road safety (pdf) – of fewer than 10 deaths per 100,000 people.

    Yet Thailand remains wildly off the mark; only 47% of those driving or riding pillion wear helmets. Official figures suggest neighbouring Asian countries fare little better, with motorbikes accounting for 61% of fatalities in Indonesia, 58% in Malaysia and 62.8% in Cambodia.

    The region's high statistics are partly explained by the preference for cheap and easy motorbikes over cars, and their resulting ubiquity. But Ratanawadee H Winther, of the Bangkok-based Asia Injury Prevention Foundation (AIPF) – working with the Thai government and key stakeholders to meet road safety targets – believes there are also cultural reasons, not least a seeming indifference to safety precautions.

    "Thai people still lack awareness and take safety very lightly," says Winther. "They're also very superstitious when it comes to death – for example, they believe someone will not die if they're not 'meant' to."

    Dr Witaya Chadbunchachai, the director of the trauma and critical care centre of Khon Kaen regional hospital's centre for injury prevention and safety promotion, which collaborates with the World Health Organisation, believes Thailand's rapid industrialisation is also a factor.

    "Mass public transport is insufficient and ineffective," he says. "We see wider, better roads into villages, but they've not been designed with safety in mind, and we have a high volume of vehicles on the roads – 22m motorcycles and 6m cars. It's too easy to get a driver's licence … and just because a driver has a licence doesn't mean he's a good driver."

    Both Winther and Chadbunchachai say unlicensed motorbike drivers are common because a lack of viable public transport means motorbikes are used for everyday tasks including carrying large and bulky items, driving at night (often under the influence), and going to school, work or the market. Many motorbike riders are under driving age.

    "Most students who live rurally have to go to school but are below the driving age of 18, so to get around they use motorbikes," explains Winther. "The police don't want to punish them for their situation, so they usually let them go on their way."

    Activists claim better police enforcement is crucial to Thailand meeting its targets. But police reluctance, coupled with low fines, renders the law ineffectual. "The penalty is not severe enough," says Winther. "It doesn't make people afraid."

    The government is inattentive towards its safety programme, depending on partners to help roll out national programmes, says Arun Pinta of Thailand's Road Safety Directing Centre. The centre, responsible for Thailand's road safety initiatives, is part of the same disaster mitigation and prevention department that deals with floods, earthquakes and land development. "There is a lot to do," says Pinta.

    This month, the AIPF and the government are piloting the Thailand helmet vaccine initiative, aimed at achieving a 100% helmet-wearing rate among children. The message is that wearing a helmet is an effective "vaccine" against injury or death, and the most effective way of protecting children on the roads.

    The pilot is part of a worldwide initiative to increase helmet use led by the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, AIPF and the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, among others. It will build capacity among police and parents and work on public campaigns and education. The goal in Thailand, says Winther, is to focus on helmet provision, technical assistance and awareness through schools. But activists also want technology such as speed cameras, radar guns and breathalysers.

    "If we had a 100% helmet rate, we'd save 3,000 lives every year, and 100,000 people would have fewer injuries and disabilities," argues Chadbunchachai. "Around 80% of those who die from motorbike accidents suffer head injuries, and roughly 5% of those admitted to hospital from motorbike accidents end up handicapped – that's about 40,000-50,000 people. They have spinal or head injuries and become dependent on relatives or parents, unable to work again."

    According to Winther, helmet use depends on affordability, availability – children's helmets are often found only in larger cities, for example – and design. "In Thailand, standard-issue helmets are very heavy because they are based on EU standards, which are very stringent but formulated for cold countries where heat is not a problem," Winther says. "The helmets here are so heavy and ugly, it doesn't encourage people to wear them."

    Despite the difficulties Thailand faces, activists hope targets will eventually be met. "We have the expertise, the knowhow and the financial resources," says Pinta. "We just need to get more people to wear their helmets."

    guardian.co.uk

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